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THE MAIN ALTARPIECE
The Main Altarpiece (1520-1522), work by Felipe Bigarny, is considered to be one of the first and biggest Plateresque altarpiece carved in Spain. The statues of the Catholic Kings in prayer are works by Diego de Siloé's curia. It is a work reminiscent of the Ogival style and the gothic distribution, movement and dramatic naturalism, and of the richness of the plateresque ornamental elements. It is an accurate reflection of the transitional moment between two periods —the medieval and modern periods— and between two styles: Gothic and Renaissance. |
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In order to understand the multiple messages of this exceptional plastic document, visitors must consider its historical aspects (cultural, religious, social, political) under which it was conceived and created. Its complex and meditated iconography represents symbolically three concepts of unity that are key within the government policy of the Catholic Kings. All the iconography representations are focused on three cores with their own thematic unity:
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Structurally, and beginning from the bottom, the altarpiece consists of a lower bench, bench and two sections or tiers (lower and upper tiers), and a top attic tier. |
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Among the ornamental motifs of the altarpiece, the pomegranate is prominent. The Christian thinking uses the pomegranate image to express the unity and diversity of the Church from the fourth century. The first person using this comparison was St. Gregory of Elvira († h. 392), bishop of the Hispano-Roman church of Iliberis, diocese that was named Granada some centuries later. The frequent presence of the pomegranate as an ornamental motif is justified by the name of the city, and by its use in literature and arts as the emblem of the integration plurality in the union.
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«Who being in the form of God, |
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